Abstract

The dinocephalians (Synapsida, Therapsida) were one of the dominant tetrapod groups of the Middle Permian (Guadalupian Epoch, ~270–260 million years ago) and are most abundantly recorded in the Tapinocephalus Assemblage Zone (AZ) of the Main Karoo Basin, South Africa. Dinocephalians are thought to have become extinct near the top of the Abrahamskraal Formation of the Beaufort Group and their disappearance is one criterion used to define the base of the overlying Pristerognathus AZ. Because of the abundance of fossils in the Karoo, the Beaufort Group biozones form the biostratigraphic standard for later Permian terrestrial tetrapod ecosystems, so their stratigraphic delineation is of great importance to Permian palaeobiology. We report two new specimens of the rare tapinocephalid dinocephalian Criocephalosaurus from the lowermost Poortjie Member, which makes them the youngest dinocephalians known from the Main Karoo Basin and extends the Tapinocephalus AZ from the Abrahamskraal Formation up into the Teekloof Formation. The extension of the Tapinocephalus AZ relative to the lithostratigraphy potentially affects the biozone or biozones to which a fossil species can be attributed; this extension has implications for biostratigraphic correlations within the Main Karoo Basin as well as with other basins across Gondwana. These discoveries also indicate that a population of herbivorous tapinocephalids survived as rare constituents of the tetrapod fauna after most generic richness within the clade had already been lost.

Highlights

  • The Dinocephalia are a clade of mostly large basal therapsids[1] that were widely distributed around Pangaea in the Guadalupian

  • Dinocephalians were an important constituent of early therapsid faunas, they disappear from the fossil record at the top of the Middle Permian Tapinocephalus AZ11,14,15 and in the Main Karoo Basin their last occurrence is a major criterion defining the base of the overlying Pristerognathus AZ16

  • The Tapinocephalus Assemblage Zone (AZ) corresponds to the upper Abrahamskraal Formation, apart from its uppermost strata, while the overlying Pristerognathus AZ is considered to extend through the uppermost part of the Abrahamskraal Formation and the Poortjie Member of the Teekloof Formation.[17]

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Summary

Youngest dinocephalians from the Karoo

Youngest dinocephalian fossils extend the Tapinocephalus Zone, Karoo Basin, South Africa. The extension of the Tapinocephalus AZ relative to the lithostratigraphy potentially affects the biozone or biozones to which a fossil species can be attributed; this extension has implications for biostratigraphic correlations within the Main Karoo Basin as well as with other basins across Gondwana. These discoveries indicate that a population of herbivorous tapinocephalids survived as rare constituents of the tetrapod fauna after most generic richness within the clade had already been lost

Introduction
Institutional Abbreviations
Putfontein c
Discussion and conclusions
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